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COMMENTARY: Protect our children, stop the carnage caused by guns

Louis Cappelli Jr.
Published 5:30 p.m. ET Feb. 22, 2018

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Teenagers voice opinions on what politicians should do about gun violence.
Chris LaChall/Staff Photographer

Around 3,000 protesters gathered outside of the Florida Capitol Building on Wednesday in support of gun reform. The protest comes one week after the shooting in Parkland, Florida that left 17 people dead.(Photo: Andrew Salinero/FSView)

Since the tragedy that took place in Newtown, Conn., in 2012, there have been 239 school shootings across the nation affecting 438 students and teachers and ending in 138 deaths. Countless beautiful children, teachers and administrators have had their lives snuffed out in the past six years. One thing ties these incidents together: Every suspect had easy access to a gun, and worse – a weapon of war. The horror that every family feels watching the carnage is crushing, and we mourn the lives taken away that never truly had the chance to get started. We also feel a deep, disgusting anxiety because all of us know that, without changes in federal gun laws, this will happen again and again, and we will be helpless to stop it.

An AR-15, the military-grade weapon that was spawned by the M16, which gained its prominence in the Vietnam War, has been the weapon of choice to kill as many people as possible in many school shootings and mass shootings throughout the country. There was a time, not long ago, that these powerful machine guns could not be obtained through the federal assault weapons ban enacted in 1994. Nevertheless, once the gun industry and the National Rifle Association put enough lobbying money into the pockets of lawmakers, the ban expired in 2004 without even a debate in Congress. The day that ban expired was the same day our federal legislators, who take millions of dollars from the NRA, turned their back on our children.

Fast forward to today, approximately 8 million AR-15s are in circulation and, like the Parkland, Fla., shooter, you only need a valid driver’s license to get one in that state. This is also a bigger problem of the more than 300 million guns currently in circulation throughout our nation. Let’s face it: It takes more paperwork and proficiency testing to get a driver’s license in most states in the nation than it does to buy a semiautomatic assault weapon with a 30-clip capacity.

New Jersey’s gun laws are stringent, which we endorse and embrace, and hopefully under Gov. Phil Murphy they will get tighter on magazine capacity, safe-gun technology and stricter limits on conceal-carry.

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The Florida Parkland shooting survivors have a supporter in former President Barack Obama. Rob Smith (@robsmithonline) has all the details.
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That said, the reality of high-capacity firearms undermining our community is only too real. Twice in the past month in Camden County, our SWAT units have been called out on crimes that involve suspects using an AR-15 and a modified AK-47.

Furthermore, take for example a gun trafficking bust that just took place here this month. The suspects in the case were using a straw buyer in Ohio who was buying an AR-15 and AK-47s and shipping them to our county. The buyers got those weapons with a 25-minute background check and walked out of the gun shop, then shipped these weapons of mass destruction right into our backyard. In order to buy these weapons, nothing else is needed in Ohio, and more than 30 other states, except a cursory background check to walk out of a gun shop the same day with an assault weapon.

Our No. 1 task and priority in this world is to protect our children; nothing else comes close. And in this current landscape, gun proliferation makes that harder and harder. Schools should be a sanctuary for our kids and not a place that we worry about as a target for mass shootings.

Throughout the developed world, no other nation experiences this kind daily tragedy because of our nation’s access to firearms. What we are asking for is federal standardized guns laws that ensure the safety of this nation, our schools and our children.

We need to make our voices heard and we need to make our federal legislators, especially the ones who are calling for thoughts and prayers, to get off their asses and work with their colleagues to solve this endemic problem. Finally, it is time to take back the leverage of the NRA and gun industry. Their actions have always been about greed and gun sales, so let’s start putting citizens first again and let this be our final line in the sand.

Louis Cappelli Jr. is director of the Camden County Board of Freeholders.

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Speaking to a major conservative gathering outside Washington, DC, Vice President Mike Pence addressed the recent school massacre in Parkland, Florida and said the administration will make school safety "our top national priority." (Feb. 22)
AP